A phase leg in an inverter bridge has an upper transistor with upper gate, collector, and emitter terminals, wherein the upper gate and emitter terminals are arranged to create an upper common source inductance. A lower transistor has lower gate, collector, and emitter terminals, wherein the lower gate and emitter terminals are arranged to create a lower common source inductance. An upper diode is coupled across the upper collector and emitter terminals and substantially in parallel with the upper common source inductance. A lower diode is coupled across the lower collector and emitter terminals and substantially in parallel with the lower common source inductance. Thus, the diodes substantially bypass the common source inductances when carrying commutation current when one of the transistors is switching off. This allows the phase leg to possess significant common source inductance at the gate terminals while avoiding “shoot-through” issues.
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4. A power converter comprising:
a dc link with positive and negative buses configured to receive a dc supply voltage;
a phase leg comprising an upper transistor and a lower transistor coupled in series between the buses and an upper diode and a lower diode coupled across respective collector and emitter terminals of the respective upper and lower transistors, wherein a junction between the upper and lower transistors is configured to be coupled to a load, wherein the upper gate and emitter terminals are arranged to create an upper common source inductance, wherein the lower gate and emitter terminals are arranged to create a lower common source inductance, wherein the upper diode is coupled substantially in parallel with the upper common source inductance, and wherein the lower diode is coupled substantially in parallel with the lower common source inductance; and
a gate driver coupled to the phase leg activating the upper transistor according to an upper gate signal and activating the lower transistor according to a lower gate signal;
wherein the phase leg further comprises a power module substrate carrying a plurality of conductive layers, wherein the conductive layers define a positive rail and a negative rail arranged between first and second mounting regions;
wherein the upper transistor and the lower diode are mounted to the substrate in the first mounting region; and
wherein the lower transistor and the upper diode are mounted to the substrate in the second mounting region.
1. A phase leg comprising;
an upper transistor having upper gate, collector, and emitter terminals, the upper gate and emitter terminals arranged to create an upper common source inductance;
a lower transistor having lower gate, collector, and emitter terminals, the lower gate and emitter terminals arranged to create a lower common source inductance;
an upper commutation diode coupled across the upper collector and emitter terminals and in parallel with the created upper common source inductance;
a lower diode coupled across the lower collector and emitter terminals and substantially in parallel with the created lower common source inductance; and
a power module substrate carrying a plurality of conductive layers, wherein the conductive layers define a positive rail and a negative rail arranged between first and second mounting regions, wherein the upper transistor and the lower diode are mounted to the substrate in the first mounting region, and wherein the upper transistor and the lower diode are mounted to the substrate in the first mounting region;
wherein the transistors are connected in series between positive and negative bus terminals and have an intermediate junction providing an output of the phase leg, wherein the upper diode has an anode terminal connected to the intermediate junction substantially bypassing the created upper common source inductance; and wherein the lower diode has an anode terminal connected to the negative bus terminal substantially bypassing the created lower common source inductance.
2. The phase leg of
3. The phase leg of
5. The power converter of
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Not Applicable.
Not Applicable.
The present invention relates in general to power switching devices in an inverter bridge, and, more specifically, to inverter drive systems for electrified vehicles using discrete power switching devices with high switching efficiency.
Electric vehicles, such as hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs), plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), and battery electric vehicles (BEVs), use inverter-driven electric machines to provide traction torque. A typical electric drive system may include a DC power source (such as a battery pack or a fuel cell) coupled by contactor switches to a variable voltage converter (VVC) to regulate a main bus voltage across a main DC linking capacitor. An inverter is connected between the main buses and a traction motor in order to convert the DC bus power to an AC voltage that is coupled to the windings of the motor to propel the vehicle.
The inverter includes transistor switching devices (such as insulated gate bipolar transistors, IGBTs) connected in a bridge configuration with a plurality of phase legs. A typical configuration includes a three-phase motor driven by an inverter with three phase legs. An electronic controller turns the switches on and off in order to invert a DC voltage from the bus to an AC voltage applied to the motor. The inverter may pulse-width modulate the DC link voltage in order to deliver an approximation of a sinusoidal current output to drive the motor at a desired speed and torque. Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) control signals applied to the gates of the IGBTs turn them on and off as necessary so that the resulting current matches a desired current.
Because each phase leg of the inverter has a pair of upper and lower switching transistors connected across the DC link, it is important that both devices in a leg not be conducting (i.e., turned-on) simultaneously. A short time interval (known as dead-time) is typically inserted in the PWM switching signals during which both the upper and lower switching devices of a phase leg are turned off in order to prevent such shoot-through.
Common source inductance refers to an inductance shared by the main power loop (i.e., the drain-to-source or collector-to-emitter power output of the transistor) and the gate driver loop (i.e., gate-to-source or gate-to-emitter) in a power switching transistor. The common source inductance carries both the device output current (e.g., drain to source current) and the gate charging/discharging current. A current in the output (power loop) portion of the common source inductance modifies the gate voltage in a manner that reinforces (e.g., speeds up) the switching performance. For a switching bridge, the reduced switching time may be desirable since it may have an associated reduction in the energy consumed (i.e., lost) during the switching transition, as long as other potential side effects are contained. For example, a large common source inductance may increase the potential for the occurrence of shoot-through.
In one aspect of the invention, a phase leg is configured to possess significant common source inductance at the gate terminals in a manner that avoids “shoot-through.” An upper transistor has upper gate, collector, and emitter terminals, wherein the upper gate and emitter terminals are arranged to create an upper common source inductance. A lower transistor has lower gate, collector, and emitter terminals, wherein the lower gate and emitter terminals are arranged to create a lower common source inductance. An upper diode is coupled across the upper collector and emitter terminals and substantially in parallel with the upper common source inductance. A lower diode is coupled across the lower collector and emitter terminals and substantially in parallel with the lower common source inductance. Thus, the diodes substantially bypass the common source inductances when carrying commutation current when one of the transistors is switching off.
Common source inductance is an inductance shared by a main power loop and a gate driver loop for a transistor switching device. It usually arises from parasitic inductances associated with the device packaging and traces on printed circuit boards. In the context of switching bridges used for DC to AC power conversion, the presence of common source inductance can be beneficial.
The coupling between a power loop and a gate loop can sometimes create undesirable interactions in which changes in the output current from a device causes changes in the gate signal which is attempting to control the device. Therefore, typical design rules used during development of transistor device packaging and circuits using such devices have aimed to minimize the common source inductance.
For a transistor in a phase leg, the influence of the magnitude of the common source inductance on the switching time and voltage overshoot is shown in
The magnitude of the gate loop inductance and/or the power loop inductance and the degree of mutual coupling between them can be easily manipulated (e.g., enhanced) by selecting an appropriate layout and/or including added overlapping coils in PCB traces forming conductive paths to the transistor gates or emitters in order to obtain a desired common source inductance.
If LCSI is increased too much, however, the potential side effect of shoot-through could occur as shown in
A lower transistor 22 having lower gate, collector, and emitter terminals is connected in series with upper transistor 21 at a junction 25 between positive bus 23 and negative bus 24. The lower gate and emitter terminals create a lower common source inductance comprised of gate loop inductance 32 and power loop inductance 33. A gate driver 34 and gate resistor 35 are coupled to the gate terminal in order to control the switching of lower transistor 22. A lower diode is coupled across the lower collector and emitter terminals in a direction anti-parallel to transistor 22.
The invention enables deliberate increases in the common source inductance while avoiding increasing the VGE of an unswitched transistor during the switching process of its complementary transistor in the phase leg. Unlike the prior art wherein the current commutation paths include both an anti-parallel diode and the structures that create the common source inductance, the present invention reconfigures the placement of the anti-parallel diode so that the commutation current substantially does not flow through the common source inductance. As shown in
The upper gate and emitter terminals are arranged to create an upper LCSI as a result of coupling between a gate inductance 52 and a power loop inductance 53. The lower gate and emitter terminals are arranged to create a lower LCSI as a result of coupling between a gate inductance 54 and a power loop inductance 55. Upper diode 46 is substantially in parallel with upper common source inductance LCSI so that the commutation current through upper diode 46 when lower transistor 42 is switching off is directed away from inductance 53. In particular, upper diode 46 has an anode terminal connected to intermediate junction 45 substantially bypassing the upper LCSI. Even though it may be difficult to eliminate all common source inductance from the circuit branch containing upper diode 46, it is sufficient that the majority of power loop inductance 53 is parallel to diode 46. As described more specifically below, structures that may be introduced for deliberately increasing the upper LCSI (such as loops in the conductors or tracing carrying the gate drive signal) may be physically separated from upper diode 46 to ensure that diode 46 remains in parallel with substantially all of the upper LCSI. Likewise, lower diode 47 is substantially in parallel with lower common source inductance LCSI so that the commutation current through lower diode 47 when upper transistor 41 is switching off is directed away from inductance 55. In particular, lower diode 47 has an anode terminal connected to negative bus terminal 44 substantially bypassing the lower LCSI.
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